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ASX Release2020 Investor Day
INVESTOR CONTACTDale KoendersHead of Investor Relations+ 61 2 9250 5626+61 457 559 036dale.koenders@ampol.com.au
AMPOL LIMITEDACN 004 201 307
LEVEL 242 MARKET STREETSYDNEY NSW 2000
Monday 23 November 2020 (Sydney): Ampol Limited provides the attached 2020 Investor Day Presentation.
Authorised for release by: the Board of Ampol Limited
MEDIA CONTACTRichard BakerHead of Corporate Affairs+61 2 9250 5369+61 417 375 667richard.baker@ampol.com.au
3
Jeff EtheringtonInterim Chief Financial Officer
Joanne TaylorExecutive General Manager
Retail, Brand and Culture
Ampol Leadership Team
Alan Stuart-GrantExecutive General Manager
Strategy and Corporate Development
Matt HallidayManaging Director & CEO
Georgina KochGeneral Counsel & Company
Secretary
Andrew BrewerExecutive General Manager
Infrastructure
Brent MerrickExecutive General Manager
Commercial
4
Agenda
SESSION ONE
09:00 – 09:55 Overview, strategy and short-term priorities Matt Halliday
09:55 – 10:00 Break
SESSION TWO
10:00 – 10:10 F&I Australia Brent Merrick
10:10 – 10:20 F&I International Brent Merrick
10:20 – 10:30 Retail Joanne Taylor
10:30 – 10:40 Energy transition Alan Stuart-Grant
10:40 – 10:45 Conclusion Matt Halliday
10:45 – 11:30 Q&A All
6
Overview
Ampol is Australia’s market-leading fuels and retail business, underpinned by strategic infrastructure and strong customer positions
COVID-19 impacts have highlighted the quality of the business (ex-Refining and Aviation), with strong underlying performance in our Retail and International businesses, however the outlook for demand remains uncertain
Despite the unprecedented disruption, we have made strong progress against our 2019 Investor Day commitments
We remain committed to disciplined capital allocation to ensure strong ROCE across all parts of the portfolio
We are capitalising on a unique opportunity to bring back an iconic Australian brand and reinvigorate our customer connectionand organisational culture
We have a clear strategy to:
– Enhance the core business through relentless focus on cost efficiency, capital effectiveness and customer delivery
– Deliver earnings growth in International and Retail, where we continue to build momentum
– Build foundations for energy transition, leveraging the strength of our assets, customer positions and capabilities
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We are the Australian transport fuels leaderAmpol possesses qualities that are unmatched in the Australian transport fuels industry
Strategic assets Deep customer base
Iconic Australian brand
Australia’s largest integrated fuel supplier: – 21BL Australian and International volumes*– Manage valuable 16BL Australian short position*
Strong trading and shipping capability Growing presence in international market (bought or sold cargoes
from 19 countries in 2020**)
Significant B2B and B2C customer platforms:– Over 80K business accounts– Over 3M weekly Convenience Retail (CR) customers
~19-year average historical supply relationship with top 20 B2B customers***
– Leading card offer, with ~38%^ market share
Ampol brand strongly resonates with Australians Market leader in Australian transport fuels (largest wholesale
supplier, with 28% market share in 2019) CR store transition 96% complete** Relentless focus on safety and reliability
Supply chain expertise
Portfolio of privileged infrastructure:– 1.5BL owned capacity in highly strategic locations– Potential to adapt for alternate uses
Australia’s largest branded retail network at ~1,930 sites Valuable partnerships with industry leaders including Woolworths,
Uber Eats, Evie Networks
* 2019 volumes (pre COVID-19)** As of 31 October 2020*** Based off 2019 analysis^ Source: ACA Research 2019
8
Resilient in 2020:
Scale in 2019:
Petrol & Convenience (P&C) spend ↑ 1.3%***
Diesel ↓ 1%;
Gasoline ↓ 15%; Jet ↓ 53%*
~56BL
Estimated daily demand ↓ 6%**
~1,100BL $8.8bn
* September 2020 YTD versus pcp** Versus pcp; estimate as at October 2020*** Moving annual total as at 26 July 2020
Source: APS; FGE - Asia Pacific Petroleum Databook 1: Supply and Demand (Fall 2020); IRI, Opportunities and Challenges for Convenience Retail post Covid-19; 2019 AACS State of the Industry report
Asia-Pacific transport fuels Convenience and QSRAustralian transport fuels
We operate in three large and resilient marketsOur strong platform means we are well positioned to take advantage of growth opportunities in all of these markets
9
(200)
(100)
0
100
200
300
400
2017 2018 2019 Last 12 Months**
20% 17%
10% 13%
3-yr Avg.***(incl. Lytton)
3-yr Avg.***(excl. Lytton)
Last 12 Months**(incl. Lytton)
Last 12 Months**(excl. Lytton)
Percent
ROCE* – Total company
Percent
ROCE* Last 12 Months** – Business unit
* ROCE = EBIT / Capital Employed. Calculated based on reporting at the time (i.e. on a post AASB 16 basis from 2019)** Last 12 months to 30 September 2020; ROCE calculated using last 12 months EBIT to 30 September 2020 and 2019 CE (except for CR and Lytton adjusted for June 2020 impairment)*** 3 Year Average 2017 -2019. Calculated based on reporting at the time (i.e. on a post AASB 16 basis from 2019)^ Includes Gull, SEAOIL and Trading & Shipping International^^ Includes Bulk Fuels, Lubes and Trading & Shipping Australia
$m
EBIT – Business unit
F&I Aus (excl. Lytton)
Lytton
Conv. Retail
F&I Int’l
-32%16% 14% 12%
F&I Int'l^ Conv. Retail F&I Aus^^(excl. Lytton)
Lytton
Our non-refining businesses generate good returnsWith the exception of the recent performance of Lytton, the integrated business generates compelling returns
10
BRING BACK AMPOL Bring back an iconic Australian brand and reinvigorate our people and customer connection
FURTHER COST SAVINGS Take further action on costs to mitigate demand impacts and reinforce competitive position
MAXIMISE LYTTON VALUE Review to determine how to maximise value from a highly strategic and well-located asset
IMPROVE RETAIL NETWORK We have released significant capital, with further potential to improve returns
RESTORE F&I AUSTRALIA ROCE
Our market leading position provides resilience, but we will take action to further strengthen our infrastructure and focus on capital effectiveness and cost efficiency
INT’L EARNINGS GROWTH Leverage our scale and capabilities to accelerate our growth in regional markets
SHOP EARNINGS GROWTH Leverage our strength in retail fuel to capture opportunities from the evolving behaviours and expectations of our customers
BUILD FOUNDATIONS FORENERGY TRANSITION
Transition with our customers, focusing on a targeted set of energy and decarbonisation themes with clear linkages to our capabilities and assets
ENHANCEthe core business
EXPANDfrom rejuvenated fuels platform
EVOLVEenergy offer for our customers
Powering better journeys, today and tomorrow
Strategic assets Supply chain expertiseDeep customer base
Purpose
Strengths
Strategy
Our strategy builds on our strengths in fuelsOur strategy focuses on our core business, and establishes a platform to grow and ultimately evolve as energy markets transition
11
Optimal Capital Structure Adj. Net Debt / EBITDA target of 1.5x – 2.0x Where Adj. Net Debt > 2.0x EBITDA, debt reduction plans become a
focus
Stay-In-Business Capex Focused on safety and reliability of supply
Ordinary Dividends 50% – 70% of RCOP NPAT (fully franked)
Capital Returns Where Adj. Net Debt < 1.5x
EBITDA (or sufficient headroom exists)
Growth Capex Where clearly accretive to
shareholder returns Investments to support energy
transition
Capital Allocation Framework Commitment to a strong investment grade credit rating
Mandated a number of banks to explore the possibility of issuing A$ wholesale hybrid capital securities, subject to market conditions
$300 million off-market buy-back announced, following settlement of the property transaction
The buy-back has been sized in accordance with our credit rating commitment and Capital Allocation Framework, having regard to business performance and outlook, and future growth options
Committed to releasing franking credits over time, subject to our Capital Allocation Framework and business performance
We will remain disciplined in our approachOur approach will be governed through a well-defined Capital Allocation Framework, underpinned by operating and capital efficiency
12
Be safe and ethically
responsible in our operations
Support workplace diversity
Announce our ambitions, targets and a decarbonisation strategy along with our TCFD report during 1H 2021 – climate scenario analysis underway
Routinely integrate ESG considerations into our strategy and business planning
Develop an ESG scorecard to monitor our progress
In aligning our organisation behind our ESG strategy, we will:
SHAREHOLDERS
Future-proof Ampol as we begin to invest in in-
market and commercially viable
technologies
EMPLOYEES
COMMUNITY
CUSTOMERS
Generate economic and social benefits for the Australian economy
and provide support for those in times of need
Transition with our customers toward a low-carbon future
Our decisions are informed by our approach to ESGAmpol is taking a responsible and long-term view to deliver value for stakeholders
13
Be safe and ethically responsible in our
operations
Support workplace diversity
EMPLOYEES
CUSTOMERS
Generate economic and social benefits for the Australian economy and provide
support for those in times of need
Transition with our customers toward a low-carbon future
2019 Investor Day Progress
Improve our network
Core company-operated network Proposed IPO of 49% interest Charter Hall consortium acquired 49% interest for $682 million
Non-core sitesunder review Under review ~100 back to core and process underway to change operating model for ~130
Alternate use sites Divestment process 25 higher and better use retail sites sold for $136 million
$195m earnings growth by
2024*
Cost-out $40m in 2020 Delivered in 2020
F&I International $70m by 2024 Strong performance in Trading & Shipping Int’l, Gull NZ and SEAOIL
Convenience Retail non-fuel $85m by 2024 Positive momentum on basket size, gross margin and labour efficiencies
Capital management
Franking credits Release franking credits $300 million OMBB announcement
Hybrid Capital Issue New hybrid Considering an A$ wholesale hybrid issue, subject to market conditions Structured to support balance sheet and Moody’s credit rating
* From 2019 base EBIT
We are delivering on our promises from 2019 Investor DayDespite a year of unprecedented disruption, we have delivered on the strategic initiatives outlined at our 2019 Investor Day
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Rebrand Bring back Ampol Launch national rollout and achieve network scale by the end of 2021
Improve returns from F&I Australia
Lytton refinery review Complete review by end of 1H 2021
Improve returns Review asset base operations to enhance capital effectiveness and drive cost efficiency Selectively pursue value accretive investments to strengthen infrastructure position
Earnings growth
Cost-out Upgraded overhead reduction program to achieve additional $40 million by 2022*
F&I International Network expansion in NZ and the Philippines Trading & Shipping growth across customers, geographies and products
Convenience Retail non-fuel Embed efficiencies across shop operations and disciplined approach to format upgrades New store pipeline and network rebrand
Improve our network
Maximise portfolio value Evaluate value maximising strategies for ~75 freehold sites
Capital management
Release franking credits Continued prudent management of balance sheet Committed to releasing franking credits over time, subject to our Capital Allocation Framework and business
performance
* Represents F&I Aust and corporate overhead costs; Refining to be addressed separately through the Lytton Review; excludes natural group cost inflation and one off cost increases
We have a clear set of 2021 prioritiesClear strategic priorities to grow shareholder value during 2021 by continuing to grow earnings and improving returns by strengthening our asset positions and improving cost and capital efficiency
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Bring back Ampol
Bring back an iconic Australian brand and
reinvigorate our people and customer connection
Distinctly Australian
Customer-driven energy
solutions
Market leader in transport
fuels
Refreshedcompany-operated network
Relentless focuson safety and
reliability
World-classfuels that gothe distance
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Take further action on costs to mitigate demand
impacts and reinforce competitive position
Further cost savings
17
18
* Excludes natural group cost inflation, program being based on 2018 baseline** Represents F&I Aust and corporate overhead costs; Refining to be addressed separately through the Lytton Review; excludes natural group cost inflation and one off cost increases
$60m
$40m
$40m
Delivered in2019*
Delivered in2020*
New target**2022
Office relocation
IT simplification
Rationalise depot network
Reduce manning levels across distribution network
Increased use of automation and technology
Cost-out initiative examples
We continue to take action on costsContinual focus on improving the overall cost base – new program to reduce overheads by an additional $40 million by 2022
19
Review to determine how to maximise value from a highly strategic and well-located asset
Maximise Lytton value
20
Why we are taking action
Global refining heavily impacted by COVID-19; Lytton loss making
Refining in Australia competitively disadvantaged versus large, modern regional refineries
Lytton earnings volatility impacts financial settings
Well-located asset on ~220ha land must deliver an appropriate return
Increased competitor ability to import into Brisbane; may impact refinery economics
Findings expected by end of 1H 2021; all options to be considered
Key considerations
Lytton Refiner Margin (LRM) outlook
Potential for productivity and cost improvements; 2027 fuel standards capex
Fuel security and government support initiatives
Impacts from separation from supply chain
Impact on competitive position from moving to import model
Trading and Shipping value creation from shifting from crude, to product imports
Environment, workforce and community
Possible outcomes
Continued refining operations with efficiency program to deliver improved financial performance
Conversion to import terminal:– Closure and remediation costs
estimated to be lower than Kurnell, given smaller size
– Conversion capex estimated to be lower than Kurnell, given existing infrastructure capability
Potential for other uses of land zoned for industrial use
Lytton review underwayDetermining how to maximise value from a highly strategic and well-located piece of infrastructure
Improve retail networkWe have released
significant capital, with further potential to
improve returns
21
22
We have delivered on a series of capital initiatives:– 25 HBU sites divested – Execution of core property transaction has released ~$635
million*
Increased number of core sites from improvement in both shop and fuel
Continual focus on maximising returns from live capital base:– Potential to optimise capital employed over time in a
further ~75** core freehold sites, on a site-by-site basis– Continue to evaluate alternative business models for
non-core sites
Network quality improved, reflecting our focus on fuel:– 4 NSW high volume highway site leases secured– 4 NTI sites added in 2020; targeted NTI strategy to high-
grade network quality and deliver earnings growth
We continue to improve our networkOur actions have improved the quality of our network and released significant capital*
2019 2020
~730
~500
~240
~50
Coresites
Non-core sites
HBUsites
~600
~130
30 marginal sites closed
~75 core sites with potential for optimisation over time
Number of sites in network
Company-operated network
* Gross proceeds of $682 million less estimated transaction costs. The property transaction completed on 20 November 2020** Includes remaining Higher or Better Use (HBU) sites and ~50 sites excluded from property trust
~790
Capital released and network quality strengthened
Restore F&I Australia ROCE
Our market-leading position provides resilience, but we will
take action to further strengthen our infrastructure and focus on
capital effectiveness andcost efficiency
24
25
Integrated value creation
Superior asset base with improved capital
effectiveness
Relentless focuson costs
Safe, reliableoperations
Our objectivesWe are well placed to build upon our market-leading position in Australia
26
Trading & Shipping
Manufacturing
Infrastructure
B2B
Earnings are diversified by participation across the full supply chain and through a broad customer base
Informed decision-making across the value chain supports value capture
Broader base from which to pursue earnings uplift
Ability to assess and set direction of core and adjacent market growth pathways
Australian F&I (ex Lytton)
Lytton (F&I)
International F&I
Convenience Retail
Crude and product flows
Reporting segments Integration benefits
Our integrated platform creates opportunitiesIntegration delivers diversified earnings, a strong base for growth off existing business activities and skills to evolve into new areas
Convenience Retail
International & New
Customers
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15.9BL 13.3BLTotal market demand
NSW QLD VICWA SA
9.7BL 12.2BL 3.3BL
Market characteristics*
Ampol’s fuel market share
Focus on capital effectiveness
Look to strengthenposition
Quality of infrastructure position
Loss of scale due to COVID-19 demand reduction impacting current returns
Lytton Refinery return to production has reduced import volume requirements relative to the T&I period
Jet fuel challenged; international flights (incl. freight) represented >75% of Ampol 2019 jet fuel volumes
COVID-19 impacts
33% 35% 22% 23% 23%
~X
Ampol is in discussions with Puma Energy Holdings Pte. Ltd in respect of a potential acquisition of Puma’s partially constructed Perth terminal. There is no certainty at this time that a transaction will proceed. Further details will be provided at the appropriate time
We are taking action to improve returnsOur business is resilient, but we remain focused on cost efficiency and capital effectiveness
Cost efficiency and capital effectiveness
Demand reduction requires cost and capital discipline on a market by market basis to maximise gross margin and competitive unit costs (e.g. jet reset, depot rationalisation, hours of operation etc.)
Exploring full asset potential with consideration of current status, energy transition and energy security
Control of operational decisions as we move through a dynamic time for the Australian energy market is key
* Volumes and market share as of 2019
Internationalearnings growthLeverage our scale and
capabilities to accelerate our growth in regional
markets
Dale / PJP – what do we want to say here?29
30
Growth
2016 2017 2018 2019
International storage
capability
Transition to stand-alone
shipping
New commodity risk mgmt. framework
established
Third party trading in
region
International sourcing and optimisation
across regions
NYMEXInternational expansion –dedicated business
development function
established
International expansion –
Seaoil supply
International expansion –Gull supply
Approval of US office
Enabler
Hedging capability
established
2016 2017 2018 2019
Platts trading capability enabled /Ampol Shipping established /Ampol US Trading goes live
2020
Commenced fuel oil supply / Crude and gasoil storage in
region
2020
T&S
Per
form
anc
e
Capability build has translated to earnings growthTrading & Shipping (T&S) has evolved quickly and is now a strong earnings contributor and key growth enabler for the group
31
2
12
3
3
3
4
4
5
Incremental scale reduces cost to supply, creating ability to win additional volumes
and iterate growth steps
Australian fuel leader. ~16BL short position
1
Global buyer, value chain expansion,improved cost of supply2
Regional growth through complementary bolt-on acquisitions and offices3
Leverage system to supply our customers and partners internationally, and grow
product offers4
Expand capabilities, like storage and shipping, to create flexibility and access
new markets and customers5
Large Australian short position provides platform for growthT&S is systematically layering capabilities, customers, products and geographies onto our ‘physically backed’ system to generateincremental earnings from a very large International opportunity set
32
2
23
6872
91
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 Last 12Months**
2020 Achievements Future plans
Trading &Shipping
Expanded APAC customers USA office operational Value created from crude and
middle distillates int’l storage Establishment of freight
entity
New 3rd party customer contract wins New locations and product books Freight as an incremental earnings
stream Pursue the right M&A and capital efficient
growth opportunities at the right time
Strong pipeline: will open 11 sites in 2020
On track to exceed 2019 total volume, despite lockdowns
Strong volume recovery post lockdowns
Up to 12 new sites targeted in 2021 Continue selective expansion of customer
base outside of retail Trial new promotional mechanism and
card platform
Volumes back to >85% of pre-COVID levels
Opened ~50 branded sites to October, despite lockdowns
Continue retail expansion to 1,000 branded sites (expect 550+ by end 2020)
Maintain focus on terminal capacity rollout and / or aggregation
$m
International EBIT Strong progress
* From 2019 base EBIT** Last 12 months EBIT to 30 September 2020^ YTD to 31 October 2020
• YTD volumes up 77% on pcp^
• 91% EBIT CAGR from 2016 to 1H 2020 from 3rd
party sales
Progressing delivery of $70 million EBIT uplift by 2024*We continue to focus on delivering organic growth that leverages our core strengths in assets, customers and supply chain
Shop earnings growthLeverage our strength in retail fuel to capture opportunities from the evolving behaviours
and expectations of our customers
33
34
Balance value and volume to maximise
fuel profitability
Enhanced merchandising
supported by efficient shop operations
Capturing synergies from Ampol rebrand
delivery
Disciplined approach to format upgrades
ensuring strong returns
Our objectivesWe are well placed to leverage our strength in retail fuel to capture opportunities from the evolving behaviours and expectations of our customers
35
Industry fuel margins continue to grow to cover increasing cost bases
Premium fuel outperformance: ~52%* of Retail volumes; volume 5ppts** better than base grade
* Percentage of total Retail fuel volumes (petrol and diesel) for October 2020 YTD** YoY October YTD 2020 across Retail (incl. RORO)*** Net Available Margin (NAM) / site calculated pre-card, loyalty, temp gain; Ampol excludes RORO
Industry chart source: AIP data. Assumes 50:50 average of base grade gasoline and diesel Retail fuel margins
Leveraging Ampol Card, partnerships and loyalty to continue driving customer visitation
Integrated supply chain ensures right price for every product, at every site
High quality network with national coverage
Fuel margins
Network
Premium fuels
Ampol Card
Supply chain
Ampol is well positioned to continue to generate profitable fuel earnings Resilience and strength in fuel margins
Fuel continues to provide a strong base for RetailCOVID related market impacts have reiterated the resilience and importance of fuel to the Retail business
05
1015
202530
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct
20192020
cpl
Industry retail margins
$m
NAM*** / site: Ampol vs. industry
Ampol Industry
1H 17 2H 17 1H 18 2H 18 1H 19 2H 19 1H 200
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
36
Shop gross margin(post waste & shrink)
Store labour
Q3 2019 YTD Q3 2020 YTD
Percent
Quarterly network shop sales comp (LFL) growth, 2020
* YTD 31 October 2020** IRI, Moving Annual Total to September 2020*** Comparable stores under Company operation for full periods of comparison
0.6% 1.2%
7.6%
0.5%
4.5%
11.2%
Q1 2020 Q2 2020 Q3 2020
Headline growth (%) Comp (LFL) growth (%)
Strong growth in chilled perishables, grocery, beverages, tobacco and general merchandise
Retention of market share at 20.4%**, despite smaller network
Implementation of the store merchandise segmentation strategy to provide further opportunity for growth and efficiencies in 2021+
Strong +5.8% LFL sales growth*, ahead of 2020 target of >3% growth Profitability improvement driven by gross margin and labour
$m
Comparable shop performance***, Q3 YTD 2020
+10%
-5%
Improved range from implementation of Woolworths wholesale supply
Improved merchandising capability, implementation of pricing strategies and more effective promotions; enhancements to space and range
COVID as a catalyst to bring forward labour and store cost reductions. Acceleration of labour standards expected to deliver ~$20 million of sustainable labour savings that extend into 2021+
Strong growth in shop performanceTransition to company operations largely complete. Merchandising enhancements, combined with change in customer behaviour andoperational improvements, sees strong momentum in shop
37
* YTD 31 Aug 2020 vs. YTD 31 Aug 2019 (Average Kingsford and North Ryde only); YTD sales averaging ~$70K/week** Gross margin pre-waste and shrink; YTD average shop margin ~37%*** Run rate performance from January 2020 to September 2020 (Kingsford and North Ryde only)
60%*
average sales uplifts
6ppts*, **
gross margin expansion
20-30%***
run-rate labour hour reduction
20-40% capital reductions
in recent pilots
Profitability improvements combined with capital efficiencies provides pathway to >15% returns
6 pilots complete by end
2020
Format offer resonating with customersImproved profitability and capital efficiency is being delivered across Woolworths’ Metro
39
A little bit of good everyday, just got easier
Real Fresh Fast just got faster Fast, no frills
QSR
QSR QSR
Flagship~250 sites
Tier 2~250 sites
Tier 3~100 sites
Tiered Format
Strategy
AmpolRebrand By July 2022
Rebrand investment, reinvigorating network
~600 Retail sites refreshed, significantly improving customer experience
Brand ownership, building brand equity
Simplified brand strategy, with Foodary and Metro across shop
Enhanced retail market position
Tiered format strategy leveraging pilot learningsLearnings utilised to drive capital efficiencies and pathway to improved returns, with 20-30 flagship upgrades targeted in 2021
Leveraging rebrand and formats across our quality network Ampol rebrand provides opportunity to elevate core fuel proposition and site appearance
40
2018 – 2019Company ownership
2020Format pilots
2021 - 2024+Format rollout
Converting networkto company ownership
Labour enhancements
Woolworths wholesale implementation
Format rollout across three tiers and QSR
Labour efficiencies & productivity embedded
Inventory management ingrained
Space and range enhancement
Building retail capability
Focus on piloting of tiered formats & QSR
Pipeline of new stores delivered
Sub-lease income from third party rentals
* From 2019 base EBIT
Deliver labour cost efficiencies
Acceleration of labour standards expected to deliver ~$20m sustainable labour savings
Enhance site utilisation
Expanded QSR offer and incremental third party tenancies
Uplift Opportunity
Format piloting
Deliver further 20 – 30 flagship formats
Rebrand to Ampol
Rebrand ~570 company operated sites to Ampol
Future Plans
$85mIncremental
non-fuel EBIT uplift
potential
On track to deliver $85 million EBIT uplift by 2024*Significant progress made over 2020 with the accelerated delivery of labour enhancements and efficiencies, implementation of wholesale from Woolworths and progress with range simplification, formats and new store pipeline
Build foundations forenergy transition
Transition with our customers, focusing on a targeted set of energy and decarbonisation
themes with clear linkages to our capabilities and assets
41
42
The evolution of Australia's transport fuels is anticipated to be slower than many other developed economies
Over the medium term, we expect transport oils to remain a strong and growing market, particularly diesel, given lack of substitutes
Beyond 2030, we expect alternative energy technologies in Australia to grow at pace:– Large-scale infrastructure investments required– Technology roadmap to evolve with numerous competing low-
carbon options– Viable technologies will vary between industries and
geographies
Ampol will make disciplined investments towards in-market and commercially viable technologies:– Federal and State governments prioritising various early-stage
energy transition investments– Ampol well placed to benefit as the market-leader in Australian
transport fuel
Transition with our customersDemand in core Australian fuels expected to remain strong until at least 2030
Final consumption, MTJ
Australian energy mix forecasts What this means for Ampol
3.63.9 4.0
43% 41%30%
13% 14%16%
44%45% 54%
2017 2030 2050
Transport oil
Non-transport oil
Other energy*
Total
• Includes coal, gas, bioenergy, electricity and othersSource: McKinsey Energy Insights (Global Energy Perspective A1 (central) case); press search
43
Our rightto play
Where we want to play
Leverage own demand
HydrogenH H
CO2
Electricity
Biofuels and recycled fuels
Gas
Decarbonisationand mitigating solutions
Future energy trends
Customer-led transition
Global trading and aggregation expertise
Utilise strategic assets
Influence through iconic Australian brand
Industry/technology partnerships
Government priorities and funding
Close to assets/customers
Disciplined capital management
Driven by organisational and commercial enablers
Investigate targeted optionsAmpol has started focusing on a targeted set of energy and decarbonisation themes, each of which has a clear linkage to our strengths
44
Case example: Potential downstream hydrogen distribution opportunity in Tasmania
Description Ampol is exploring downstream hydrogen distribution opportunities in Tasmania
with other interested parties such as Woodside
Currently at pre-feasibility stage, with only modest financial commitment
Strategic rationale
Fuel diversification toward high-growth ‘greener’ alternative fuels
Understand the economics of hydrogen manufacturing and distribution, and target new revenue streams as domestic and export markets develop
Early exposure to potentially ‘game-changing’ technological capability
Our right to play
We are well-positioned to extend strong fuel distribution and transportation capability to hydrogen
Leveraging strong customer base in Tasmania as the basis for future demand
Engineering expertise and product handling capability highly relevant
Practical approach
1. Actively engage customers and government on energy transition
2. Staff a small, dedicated team of cross-functional capabilities tapped in to the broader organisation
3. Establish a set of relevant investment criteria to test and learn in a discipline fashion
4. Allocate a modest funding pool to establish capability and credibility
5. Seek government funding and co-investors where possible to share risk and source capability
Apply test and learn approachLeveraging partnerships to test and learn our approach to energy transition
46
Summary Ampol is Australia’s market-leading fuels and retail business, underpinned by strategic infrastructure and strong customer
positions
COVID-19 impacts have highlighted the quality of the business (ex-Refining and Aviation), with strong underlying performance in our Retail and International businesses, however the outlook for demand remains uncertain
Despite the unprecedented disruption, we have made strong progress against our 2019 Investor Day commitments
We remain committed to disciplined capital allocation to ensure strong ROCE across all parts of the portfolio
We are capitalising on a unique opportunity to bring back an iconic Australian brand and reinvigorate our customer connectionand organisational culture
We have a clear strategy to:
– Enhance the core business through relentless focus on cost efficiency, capital effectiveness and customer delivery
– Deliver earnings growth in International and Retail, where we continue to build momentum
– Build foundations for energy transition, leveraging the strength of our assets, customer positions and capabilities
49
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Ampol Monthly Total Australian Sales Volumes
Petrol Diesel Jet
Pandemic continues to impact Ampol’s Australian demand with YTD volumes:– Diesel down 4%– Jet fuel down 55%– CR down 15%^
CR volumes YTD:^– Gasoline down 19%– Diesel down 11%
Comparable shop sales +5.8% YTD; shop market share maintained despite ~7% network reduction
Gull volumes have recovered to pre-COVID levels, with YTD volumes up 2% vs. pcp; SEAOIL volumes continue to improve, but remain below pre-COVID levels
ML
Ampol monthly Australian total sales volumes COVID-19 impacts*
• All YTD comparisons as of 31 October 2020, change vs. pcp• ^ CR volumes shown on comparable basis given network reduction
Hydrocarbon demand impacts COVID-19 continues to impact volumes; resilience in diesel demand and jet volumes improving with borders reopening, although outlook remains uncertain, particularly for international jet volumes given border closures
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Network rollout commences
1H 2021 2H 2021 2H 20222H 2020
No. sites transitioned
Network rebrand spend*
25 as of 23November 2020
~$15 million ~$100 million
~660
Brand objectives Local area marketing and sponsorship launch
National launch Defend market position
~1,930~1,350
~$50 million
* Excludes marketing spend
Our rebranding journey is progressingWe have commenced rebranding activities across our branded network
Pilot launch Network scale achieved
Brand transition complete
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Illustrative Buy-back Example (For an Australian Super Fund Investor)Key Assumptions Comments
Assumed Market Price1 $ 28.00 OMBB Price $ 24.08 Assumed Market Price less maximum tender discount of 14.0%Assumed Capital Component $ 2.01 As per ATO Drafting class rulingOriginal share purchase price (cost base) $ 22.80 Assume shares held for more than 12 months
Australian tax implications of sale of shares into the OMBB
Income tax consequencesFully franked dividend component $ 22.07 Assumed Buy-Back Price less capital componentAdd: Gross up for franking credits $ 9.46 Assessable income $ 31.53 Full franked component plus gross up for franking creditsTax on assessable income $ (4.73) Superfund tax rate (15%) multiplied by assessable incomeAdd: Tax offset for franking credits $ 9.46 As per aboveNet tax benefit / (cost) $ 4.73 Franking credit less tax on assessable incomeAfter-tax dividend (Income) proceeds $ 26.80 Assessable income less net tax benefit / (cost)Capital Gains Tax consequencesSale consideration $ 5.93 Assumed Market Price less dividend componentLess: Assumed cost base $ (22.80) Assumption per aboveNominal loss on disposal $ (16.87) Sale consideration less assumed cost baseDiscounted capital loss on disposal $ (11.25) 33.33% capital gains discount for shares held for more than 12 monthsTax impact of loss $ 1.69 Tax on discounted loss on disposalAdd capital component $ 2.01 After-tax capital proceeds $ 3.70 Capital component plus tax impact of lossTotal after-tax proceeds $ 30.50 After tax dividend plus after-tax capital proceeds
Australian tax implications of sale of shares on the ASX
Shares sold on marketSale proceeds (assumed) $ 28.00 Assumed Market PriceLess: Assumed cost base $ (22.80) Nominal capital gain / (loss) on disposal $ 5.20 Sales proceeds less assumed cost baseDiscounted capital gain / (loss) $ 3.47 Capital gains discountTax impact of loss / (gain) $ (0.52) Tax on discounted capital gainTotal after-tax proceeds $ 27.48 Sale proceeds less tax impact of capital lossNet benefit / (cost) OMBB vs on market $ 3.02 After tax proceeds OMBB less after tax proceeds for on market sale
Notes:1. Assumed Market Price is as per the Buy-Back booklet
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Proposed Off-market Buy-back Timetable
Notes:While Ampol does not anticipate any changes to these dates and times, it can vary them by announcement to the ASX. Such an announcement will be taken to amend the Buy-Back Booklet (and the other Buy-BackDocuments) accordingly. Ampol may, in its absolute discretion, also decide to vary the size of the Buy-Back (subject to any legal restrictions) or not to proceed with the Buy-Back.
November 2020 Announcement of the Buy-Back Monday, 23 November
Last day that Shares can be acquired on the ASX to be eligible to participate in the Buy-Back and to qualify for franking creditentitlements in respect of the Buy-Back consideration
Wednesday, 25 November
Buy-Back Ex-Entitlement Date: the date that Shares commence trading on an ex-Buy-Back basis. Shares acquired on the ASX on or after this date will not confer an entitlement to participate in the Buy-Back
Thursday, 26 November
Buy-Back Record Date: determination of shareholders entitled to participate in the Buy-Back at 7.00pm (Sydney time) Friday, 27 November
December 2021 Despatch of Buy-Back Flyer to eligible shareholders expected to be completed Wednesday, 2 December
Tender Period opens Monday, 7 December
January 2021 Five trading days over which VWAP is calculated (for the purposes of determining the Market Price) Monday, 18 January – Friday, 22 January
Closing Date: Tenders must be received by the Registry no later than 7.00pm (Sydney time) Friday, 22 January
Buy-Back Date: Announcement of Buy-Back Price and scale back (if any) to the ASX and entry into Buy-Back Contracts Monday, 25 January
Despatch/crediting of Buy-Back proceeds to participating shareholders completed Monday, 1 February
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This presentation for Ampol Limited is designed to provide a high level overview of aspects of the operations of Ampol Limited, including comments aboutAmpol’s expectations of the outlook for 2020 and future years, as at 23 November 2020.
This presentation contains forward-looking statements relating to operations of Ampol Limited that are based on management’s own current expectations,estimates and projections about matters relevant to Ampol’s future financial performance. Words such as “likely”, “aims”, “looking forward”, “potential”,“anticipates”, “expects”, “predicts”, “plans”, “targets”, “believes” and “estimates” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
References in the presentation to assumptions, estimates and outcomes and forward-looking statements about assumptions, estimates and outcomes, whichare based on internal business data and external sources, are uncertain given the nature of the industry, business risks, and other factors. Also, they may beaffected by internal and external factors that may have a material effect on future business performance and results. No assurance or guarantee is, or should betaken to be, given in relation to the future business performance or results of Ampol Limited or the likelihood that the assumptions, estimates or outcomes will beachieved.
While management has taken every effort to ensure the accuracy of the material in the presentation, the presentation is provided for information only. AmpolLimited, its officers and management exclude and disclaim any liability in respect of anything done in reliance on the presentation.
All forward-looking statements made in this presentation are based on information presently available to management and Ampol Limited assumes noobligation to update any forward-looking statements. Nothing in this presentation constitutes investment advice and this presentation shall not constitute anoffer to sell or the solicitation of any offer to buy any securities or otherwise engage in any investment activity. You should make your own enquiries and take yourown advice in Australia (including financial and legal advice) before making an investment in Ampol Limited’s shares or in making a decision to hold or sell yourshares.
Important Notice
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